It suffices to say that Edwards did score composers no
favor with his behavior on
The Creator, and he should be called
out for even joking about using a computer emulation of Zimmer for his
film. He reportedly played the artificial intelligence-generated music
for Zimmer himself and claimed that the composer was amused by it. For
Zimmer, this episode should serve as a wake-up call, because his
extensive experience in re-shaping how scores are produced since the
1990's could be threatened, not necessarily enhanced by
computer-generated music that would ironically redefine "remote control"
scores. Edwards ultimately hired Zimmer in the flesh to provide a "10
out of 10" film score for
The Creator, and the composer again
turned to a common Remote Control collaborator of this period, Steve
Mazzaro, for assistance in crafting the end result. Mazzaro receives
primary production credit for this music, and while there are Zimmer
drama characteristics in the work, it's not hard to imagine that
Mazzaro's influence here is fairly significant. Building upon the
emotional template from deeper parts of
The Son, for which Zimmer
had handed the production of the score to David Fleming,
The
Creator greatly expands the gravitas and features some remarkable
points of writing, including really poignant counterpoint applications,
that aren't inherently typical to Zimmer's solo work. The tone of the
score has a cerebral intent seemingly aiming to emulate Vangelis but
without the harsh synthetic edge of
Blade Runner, which was an
inspiration for the movie as a whole. Zimmer does provide his usual
synth programming, but the atmosphere of the score is rarely electronic
by nature, choosing instead to rely upon organic recordings and tasteful
applications of synthetic elements on occasion. A slightly exotic aspect
with pitched percussion resembles
Beyond Rangoon in softer
moments, and a female vocalist helps lend a breathy sound to similar
moments. A solo cello is familiar for Zimmer, but the use of both exotic
and traditional woodwind solos is a nicely rare touch. A choir offers
adult wordless tones for the fantasy aspect as necessary. The resulting
ambience, as a whole, is among the more digestibly compelling from
Zimmer during this era.
The majority of the score for
The Creator is
easy on the ears, but that doesn't mean the score is all smooth sailing.
There is pounding dissonance in the middle of "Where It All Began" and
end of "Standby," and the lone true action cue is "Lab Raid," a hostile
expression for percussion, synths, and brass with a harsher edge.
Listeners not enamored with the composer's more abrasive manipulations
of sound will want to avoid "Lab Raid" despite some interesting, deep
choral layering in the cue. The synthetic presence is less intrusive in
the other, more suspense-oriented cues in which they appear. For some
listeners, the use of an organ will sound synthetic, but its tones are
effective at conveying the Armageddon implications. The electronics
bubble along in the background of the contemplative, otherwise organic
tracks featuring the meanderings of the woodwind or string solos.
Interestingly, whereas brass sometimes causes headaches in Zimmer
scores, its insertions in
The Creator produce several highlights,
especially as they are supplied in counterpoint duties rather than
brazenly simplistic foghorn applications. Some listeners may not find
Zimmer and Mazzaro's thematic development in the score to be
particularly memorable, especially with its brevity caused by all the
interfering songs, but the narrative within the score is definitely
there. The composers choose to avoid an overly obvious role for the
evolving main theme and its offshoots until late, however, potentially
causing listeners to appreciate the tonalities of the renderings
instead. The themes tend to pit ascending and descending phrasing
against each other very deliberately, suggesting the dichotomies of the
story as they inextricably intermingle in several cues. Fragments of the
main theme and its ancillary, response-oriented interlude abound, often
thoughtfully and slowly explored in lightly dramatic presentations. The
main theme is dominant, its ascending phrasing not spectacular but
conveying the right sense of aspirational optimism for the "true love"
message of the tale. There is, intriguingly, a touch of Samuel Barber's
famed "Adagio for Strings" in the opening measures of this yearning
theme, but don't expect these connections to become truly obvious until
the latter half of the score. In fact, some may not find satisfying
clarity to the idea until the monumental "True Love" rendition of the
theme at the score's conclusion.
Zimmer and Mazzaro's main theme for
The Creator
debuts in dramatic fragments from weighty synths and strings only in
"They're Not People," but a uniquely delightful, brighter variation
occupies most of "A Place in the Sky." The climbing phrasing comes into
focus against a notably descending bassline rhythm in "She's Not Real,"
and this passage's counterpoint offers some of the most compelling music
of the entire score. The theme finally solidifies its phrases on flute
at 1:38 into "Standby," a muscular brass rendition at 3:40 a highlight
followed by the best of the theme's descending counterpoint lines at
4:19 with choir. The theme becomes urgent on organ at 0:23 into "Missile
Launch" with adult choir while secondary sections of the idea layer the
choir nicely. It is slowed and conveyed mostly by only its underlying
chords in the choral "Prayer," the theme itself eventually factoring in
the cue's middle as an organ joins the singers. The idea is
deconstructed to barely recognizable ends in the middle of "The Wounded"
and stews very softly throughout "Heaven" on exotic woodwind and
percussion. (The end of the latter cue has an A.R. Rahman feel in its
ethnicity.) Undoubtedly, the payoff for the theme comes in its
dominating redemption during "True Love," a majestic performance
conveying overwhelmingly warm tonalities rare for Zimmer since adopting
his collaborative methodology decades prior. Secondary thematic
offshoots also exist in
The Creator, led by an idea of darkness
utilizing somber, descending chord progressions as an adjunct to the
main theme. Teased during most of "Where It All Began," this theme takes
the spotlight from the main theme at 1:23 into "Missile Launch" and is
slight at 2:04 into "Prayer." Alternately, a motif of menace and fear
uses a cyclical bass motion twice notably in the score. It is subtle at
2:03 into "Where It All Began" but earns robust stature early and late
in "Lab Raid" despite never developing into anything greater. In the
end, though, it will be melodic grace of the trio of "She's Not Real,"
"Standby," and "True Love" that will deservedly garner all the attention
for this score. It's mostly a three-star work with these immense, four
to five-star moments that serve as a satisfyingly glorious expression of
dramatic warmth from Zimmer. So much of the composer's music is mixed to
sound clinical that hearing these cues of symphonic and choral grace is
incredibly pleasing. For a somewhat short, score-only album of 44
minutes in length, the 12 minutes in that trio of highlight cues will
easily carry the day for all of humanity in ways that Edwards'
ridiculous noodling with artificial intelligence will struggle to
accomplish.
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